- Franklin D. Roosevelt , November 4, 1938In 1938 the word "fascism" hadn't yet been transferred into an abridged metaphor for all the world's

unspeakable evil and monstrous crime, and on coming across President Roosevelt's prescient remark

in one of Umberto Eco's essays, I could read it as prose instead of poetry -- a reference not to the

Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse or the pit of Hell but to the political theories that regard individual citizens as the property of the government, happy villagers glad to wave the flags and wage the wars, grateful for the good fortune that placed them in the care of a sublime leader. Or, more emphatically, as Benito Mussolini liked to say, "Everything in the state. Nothing outside the state. Nothing against the state."The theories were popular in Europe in the 1930s (cheering crowds, rousing band music, splendid

military uniforms), and in the United States they numbered among their admirers a good many important people who believed that a somewhat modified form of fascism (power vested in the banks and business corporations instead of with the army) would lead the country out of the wilderness of the Great Depression -- put an end to the Pennsylvania labor troubles, silence the voices of socialist heresy and democratic dissent. Roosevelt appreciated the extent of fascism's popularity at the political box office; so does Eco, who takespains in the essay "Ur-Fascism," published in The New York Review of Books in 1995, to suggest that it's a mistake to translate fascism into a figure of literary speech. By retrieving from our historical memory only the vivid and familiar images of fascist tyranny (Gestapo firing squads, Soviet labor

camps, the chimneys at Treblinka), we lose sight of the faith-based initiatives that sustained the tyrant's rise to glory. The several experiments with fascist government, in Russiaand Spainas well as in Italyand Germany, didn't depend on a single portfolio of dogma, and so Eco, in search of their common ground, doesn't look for a unifying principle or a standard text. He attempts to describe a way of thinking and a habit of mind, and on sifting through the assortment of fantastic and often contradictory notions -- Nazi paganism, Franco's National Catholicism, Mussolini's corporatism, etc. -- he finds a set of axioms on which all the fascisms agree.

Among the most notable:The truth is revealed once and only once.Parliamentary democracy is by definition rotten because it doesn't represent the voice of the people, which is that of the sublime leader.Doctrine outpoints reason, and science is always suspect.Critical thought is the province of degenerate intellectuals, who betray the culture and subvert traditional values.The national identity is provided by the nation's enemies.Argument is tantamount to treason.Perpetually at war, the state must govern with the instruments of fear. Citizens do not act; they play the supporting role of "the people" in the grand opera that is the state.Eco published his essay ten years ago, when it wasn't as easy as it has since become to see the hallmarks of fascist sentiment in the character of an American government. Rooseveltprobably wouldn't have been surprised.

CHENEY BEING TARGETED FOR IMPEACHMENT" Around the world, as a second carrier group moves toward the Persian Gulf, and White House threats against Iran are repeated on a daily basis, it is recognized that the only certain path to stopping the planned attack on Iran is the impeachment of Dick Cheney, who today, just as in the case of the Iraq War, is running the "team" and the policy for "regime change" in Iran:" Michele Steinberg / Executive Intelligence Review

Make no mistake about it ~ Lewis Libby took the fall for Cheney in the plamegate indictments. But the greatest crime of this administration is their crime against peace ~ for which they have yet to be indicted.

The following are links to information about the Bush family, theBush cabinet appointees and the corporations, think tanks andfoundations that are behind the GW Bush administration. Myincluding these links to materials other than the articles I wroteis not to be considered an endorsement of any statement theycontain.

These links connect to sites run by the left, the religious right,conservative think tanks, political independents and themainstream media. Some are pro-Bush and are included forcross reference value. All links were good as of this writing so ifyou get a message to the contrary keep trying -they are busysites.